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Clinical management of radicular pain

Expert Review of Neurotherapeutics, 2015
This review provides an overview of the diagnosis and treatment strategies for the management of radicular pain. While it is not as common as axial spinal pain, radicular pain combines the advantage of leveraging appropriate diagnostic strategies and definitive treatments with well-informed outcome measures.
Laxmaiah, Manchikanti, Joshua A, Hirsch
openaire   +2 more sources

Radicular Pain After Harrington Instrumentation

Journal of Spinal Disorders, 1989
Three patients developed lumbar radicular pain after Harrington instrumentation and posterior spinal fusion for idiopathic scoliosis. They required a second surgical procedure for nerve root decompression. The presenting complaint after the initial procedure was persistent radicular and buttock pain. Subsequent evaluation revealed direct compression by
I, Montane, G L, Engler
openaire   +2 more sources

SPINAL AND RADICULAR PAIN DISORDERS

Neurologic Clinics, 1998
Although most acute conditions of the spine are benign and self-limited, the economic costs and disability resulting from these disorders have reached epidemic proportions in industrialized society. Recent scientific research to determine the causes of common spinal disorders, long attributed to structural abnormalities, have now implicated complex ...
C A, Argoff, A H, Wheeler
openaire   +2 more sources

Lumbar Radicular Pain

2018
This chapter addresses lumbar radicular pain, which is pain that can be attributed to a lesion affecting fibers of a spinal nerve, the nerve root, or the dorsal root ganglia. Causes of radicular pain are diverse and may include mechanical causes such as herniated intervertebral discs and lumbar foraminal stenosis or systemic causes such as diabetic ...
Varun Rimmalapudi, Radhika Grandhe
openaire   +1 more source

Myofascial pain mimicking radicular syndromes

2005
Myofascial pain is very often underscored and misunderstood in clinical practice. In many cases the localization of myofascial pain may resemble other diseases, such as radicular syndromes (e.g., low back pain from herniated disc) and even diseases of internal organs (e.g., angina pectoris, bowel diseases or gynaecological disturbances).
E, Facco, F, Ceccherelli
openaire   +2 more sources

RADICULAR PAIN IN DIABETES

Rheumatology, 1978
D L, Child, D A, Yates
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Thoracic Radicular Pain

2019
Thoracic radicular pain is uncommon compared to lumber or cervical back pain. In fact, only 5% of patients referred to pain clinics present with thoracic back pain. Clinically, thoracic radicular pain is referred to the upper extremities, thorax and abdomen as neurogenic pain, sensory changes and/or muscular weakness.
openaire   +1 more source

Response to “cervical radicular pain”

Pain Practice, 2023
Standiford Helm, Carl Noe, Gabor Racz
openaire   +2 more sources

Lumbar radicular pain.

Australian family physician, 2004
Radicular pain is caused by irritation of the sensory root or dorsal root ganglion of a spinal nerve. The irritation causes ectopic nerve impulses perceived as pain in the distribution of the axon. The pathophysiology is more than just mass effect: it is a combination of compression sensitising the nerve root to mechanical stimulation, stretching, and ...
openaire   +1 more source

Discogenic/radicular pain

Disease-a-Month, 2004
Wesley L. Smeal   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

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